ATTN Tully

so yesterday I started reading "Shooter: The Autobiography of the Top-Ranked Marine Sniper", by Marine Gunnery Sergeant Jack Coughlin. He can slot turban wrappers at 1000 yards :ill:

"At another time, on another battlefield, my radio call sign had been "Gabriel," because the archangel and I have a lot in common."

he says he doesn't have nightmares but sometimes he says his victims' faces, which of course he sees up close and personal in his scope, visit him in his dreams.
 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Master Sergeant Roy P. Benavidez of the Army Special Forces Group boarded a helicopter and dropped into the hot zone – alone and armed with just a knife – to extract a 12-man Recon team. Despite being shot in the leg and hit in the face with shrapnel, he located the wounded and dead soldiers and dragged them to the rescue chopper, taking more fire in the abdomen and back. When the fully loaded helicopter crashed, Benavidez pulled the survivors from the wreck. While carrying them to a second chopper, he sustained more mounds and killed three Vietcong. Back at the base, Benavidez – with seven gunshot wounds and 28 shrapnel wounds - was declared dead…before he sat up and spit in the doctor’s face.

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dude...did I recommend to you a book called Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans Who Risked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II by Robert Kurson?
http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0375508589/ref=sib_dp_pt/103-4641781-6307007#reader-page
it's in paperback now!!
 
this thread rules. although i dont think i could actually kill anyone i still think it's pretty interesting what these crazy fuckers do.
 
holy shit!!

MAXAM, LARRY LEONARD

Rank and organization: Corporal, U.S. Marine Corps, Company D, 1st Battalion, 4th Marines, 3d Marine Division (Rein), FMF. place and date: Cam Lo District, Quang Tri province, Republic of Vietnam, 2 February 1968. Entered service at: Los Angeles, Calif. Born: 9 January 1948, Glendale, Calif. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a fire team leader with Company D. The Cam Lo District Headquarters came under extremely heavy rocket, artillery, mortar, and recoilless rifle fire from a numerically superior enemy force, destroying a portion of the defensive perimeter. Cpl. Maxam, observing the enemy massing for an assault into the compound across the remaining defensive wire, instructed his assistant fire team leader to take charge of the fire team, and unhesitatingly proceeded to the weakened section of the perimeter. Completely exposed to the concentrated enemy fire, he sustained multiple fragmentation wounds from exploding grenades as he ran to an abandoned machine gun position. Reaching the emplacement, he grasped the machine gun and commenced to deliver effective fire on the advancing enemy. As the enemy directed maximum firepower against the determined marine, Cpl. Maxam's position received a direct hit from a rocket propelled grenade, knocking him backwards and inflicting severe fragmentation wounds to his face and right eye. Although momentarily stunned and in intense pain, Cpl. Maxam courageously resumed his firing position and subsequently was struck again by small-arms fire. With resolute determination, he gallantly continued to deliver intense machine gun fire, causing the enemy to retreat through the defensive wire to positions of cover. In a desperate attempt to silence his weapon, the North Vietnamese threw hand grenades and directed recoilless rifle fire against him inflicting 2 additional wounds. Too weak to reload his machine gun, Cpl. Maxam fell to a prone position and valiantly continued to deliver effective fire with his rifle. After 11/2 hours, during which he was hit repeatedly by fragments from exploding grenades and concentrated small-arms fire, he succumbed to his wounds, having successfully defended nearly half of the perimeter single-handedly.
 
a freind of mine knows a guy who was a sniper in the Israeli Army ... the guy had some great stories ... but IS haunted by his old job and now basically frequents bars VERY often
 
yup, that Colonel I worked with was always drunkenly crashing into cars on Post but they always hushed it up.

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HELL YEAH!!!

Rank and organization: Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army, 1st Battalion, 105th Infantry, 27th Infantry Division. Place and date: At Saipan, Marianas Islands, 20 June through 7 July 1944. Entered service at: Troy, N.Y. Birth: Troy, N.Y. G.O. No.: 35, 9 May 1945. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty at Saipan, Marianas Islands, from 20 June through 7 July 1944. When assault elements of his platoon were held up by intense enemy fire, Lt. Col. O'Brien ordered 3 tanks to precede the assault companies in an attempt to knock out the strongpoint. Due to direct enemy fire the tanks' turrets were closed, causing the tanks to lose direction and to fire into our own troops. Lt. Col. O'Brien, with complete disregard for his own safety, dashed into full view of the enemy and ran to the leader's tank, and pounded on the tank with his pistol butt to attract 2 of the tank's crew and, mounting the tank fully exposed to enemy fire, Lt. Col. O'Brien personally directed the assault until the enemy strongpoint had been liquidated. On 28 June 1944, while his platoon was attempting to take a bitterly defended high ridge in the vicinity of Donnay, Lt. Col. O'Brien arranged to capture the ridge by a double envelopment movement of 2 large combat battalions. He personally took control of the maneuver. Lt. Col. O'Brien crossed 1,200 yards of sniper-infested underbrush alone to arrive at a point where 1 of his platoons was being held up by the enemy. Leaving some men to contain the enemy he personally led 4 men into a narrow ravine behind, and killed or drove off all the Japanese manning that strongpoint. In this action he captured S machineguns and one 77-mm. fieldpiece. Lt. Col. O'Brien then organized the 2 platoons for night defense and against repeated counterattacks directed them. Meanwhile he managed to hold ground. On 7 July 1944 his battalion and another battalion were attacked by an overwhelming enemy force estimated at between 3,000 and 5,000 Japanese. With bloody hand-to-hand fighting in progress everywhere, their forward positions were finally overrun by the sheer weight of the enemy numbers. With many casualties and ammunition running low, Lt. Col. O'Brien refused to leave the front lines. Striding up and down the lines, he fired at the enemy with a pistol in each hand and his presence there bolstered the spirits of the men, encouraged them in their fight and sustained them in their heroic stand. Even after he was seriously wounded, Lt. Col. O'Brien refused to be evacuated and after his pistol ammunition was exhausted, he manned a .50 caliber machinegun, mounted on a jeep, and continued firing. When last seen alive he was standing upright firing into the Jap (no goddam political correctness back in WWII, bitches!!) hordes that were then enveloping him. Some time later his body was found surrounded by enemy he had killed.

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ref the Japanese, tho...there's a hella lot of Japanese-Americans who won these things in WWII, pretty remarkable when you consider we were taking their houses and businesses and throwing them into camps.